Ada Vidovič Muha

Ada Vidovič Muha (born March 8, 1940) is a Slovene linguist. She is an emeritus professor who has many books published on the linguistics of the Slovene language.

Ada Vidovič Muha
Born (1940-03-08) March 8, 1940[1]
Academic background
Alma materUniversity of Ljubljana
Academic work
DisciplineLinguist
Sub-disciplineSlovene language

Life

Muha was born in Pivka in 1940.[1] In 1963 she graduated from the Faculty of Arts in Ljubljana after studying Slovene and the Serbo-Croatian language in literature. After graduation, she studied at Charles University in Prague. She received her master's degree from the Faculty of Arts in Ljubljana in 1979 on "the syntactic role of the adjective word" and she became an assistant Professor. In 1984 she gained a doctorate in linguistic sciences.

She taught at the Fran Ramovš Institute and then later at the Faculty of Arts in Ljubljana.[2] She received her master's degree from the Faculty of Arts in Ljubljana in 1979 on "the syntactic role of the adjective word".

In 2000 she published a reference book, Slovensko leksikalno pomenoslovje: govorica slovarja, on the semantic of Slovenian.[3]

gollark: C#/Java are annoyingly verbose.
gollark: I think Python is a good language to start learning things with.
gollark: Apparently whoever wrote the specifications for what people learn in "computer science" thought it was important that people know about this, and for consistency or something they designed their own assembly language (which does not actually run on anything).
gollark: (technically a family of them, but whatever)
gollark: Assembly is basically a very low-level language which directly compiles to machine code, which is what the CPU hardware runs.

References

  1. Vidovič Muha.
  2. Kontakti; 01 475 22 13; Ars@rtvslo.si. "Prof. dr. Ada Vidovič Muha". ARS. Retrieved 2019-10-13.CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  3. Vidovič-Muha, Ada (2000). Slovensko leksikalno pomenoslovje: govorica slovarja (in Slovenian). Znanstveni inštitut Filozofske fakultete. ISBN 978-86-7207-125-2.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.